| The Town of Nahant is a resort town of rocky coasts in the southernmost
part of Essex County. Used in early colonial days as a grazing areas for cattle, sheep and goat flocks owned by Lynn residents, Nahant very soon
became a maritime community with a small population devoted to fishing. Settlers were granted land for
home sites but only if they also spent time fishing and small boat fishing developed before 1640. Disputed land claims
were the hallmark of the town's early years since the Indian Sagamore George apparently sold the same town site to three different sets of
people. By 1657, Nahant was laid out in planting lots of equal shares for
all residents of Lynn with the requirement that all lots were to be cleared
of wood in 6 years. This mandate effectively stripped Nahant of all its first growth woodlands.
The town became a resort Mecca very early on with chaises coming from Lynn. Visitors
stayed in boarding houses or private homes and the first hotel wasbuilt by 1803. In 1817 a steamboat sailed from Boston to Nahant daily and
by 1826 a stage from the Nahant Hotel connected twice a day with coaches
running between Boston and Salem. Fishing and several shoe shops were the
major businesses aside from agriculture and tourism and even up to 1830
year-round residents were very few. Thomas Handyside Perkins, a prominent
Boston businessman, built a hotel in Nahant in 1823 which featured a bowling alley and by the
1840's the town was already celebrated as the summer resort of Boston's elite. Incorporated in 1853, the town was the
site of the most massive hotel complex on the Atlantic Coast and the location of an annual regatta. By the end of the 19th century, there was a
visible shift away from hotels and toward residences. An era of skyrocketing growth began about 1870 and continued unabated for
the next four decades with construction firms putting up hundreds of summer
homes for visitors to the town. In the modern era, Nahant has protected its residential status and farming and industrial activity have
disappeared.
Narrative based on information provided by the Massachusetts Historical
Commission.
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